Rojava Film Commune & Sevinaz Evdike

Rojava Film Commune

Syria · Cinema

Rojava Film Commune Afield Fellow 2020

The 2020 AFIELD Fellowship is awarded to Rojava Film Commune (represented by Kurdish filmmaker Sevinaz Evdike), a local film collective rooted in Rojava’s revolutionary philosophy and inspired by the Democratic multicultural self-administration in the North and East of Syria.

“In a region where culture has been suppressed constantly by central powers and terrorist organizations, where the youth has only Turkish soap operas and Syrian state television available, we aim to foster access to a diverse range of films and encourage cinema culture as a tool for social change” says Evdike.

For the past five years The Rojava International Film Festival has screened hundreds of films over several days in most cities in Rojava, as well as villages and IDP (internally displaced person) camps.

The festival has allowed the region an open window to the world. The Film Academy (which has, due to Turkish threats been in closure for the last two years) trains youth in filmmaking, storytelling and visual media paving their creating for them a possible future in photography, film or television.

The Commune has also produced three feature documentaries, two fiction features and several short films, clips and spots.

The society of Rojava is thus becoming increasingly used to hearing the voices of its own people in the media instead of being misrepresented from outside.

Rojava Film Commune Afield Fellow 2020

The kids watching at screening project Cinema is in your Neighborhood, 2017, courtesy Diyar Hesso.

Rojava Film Commune Afield Fellow 2020

Camera training, film making workshop in Kobane. After this warkshop Rojava Film Commune opend in Kobane, 2018. Image: courtesy Ahmed Feqe.

Komîna Fîlm a Rojava is a grassroots institution that was established by local film-makers and supporters of the revolution in 2015, with the aim of developing the cinema of the revolution. Their work focuses on three aspects: education, production and showcasing cinema. They have organised the first cinema academy in the region to develop young filmmakers, scriptwriters, editors and other cinema professionals. They have a production team to develop local productions and to participate in and give support to international productions. They organise the International Film Festival of Rojava to bring cinema to the local audience, to create opportunities for local filmmakers and to create international bridges.

 

Sevinaz Evdike was born 1992 in Serekaniye, Rojava. She studied film directing at the Cigerxwin Academy in Diyarbakir, Turkey. She served as co-director of the Rojava Film Commune (AFIELD Fellow). She co-founded the Rojava Film Festival, and now works as coordinator of Kezi, a collective of Kurdish and international women filmmakers, based in Rojava. They educate filmmakers and screen films all over Rojava, based on the ideology of democratic confederalism, women’s liberation and protecting ecology.

Evdike directed the short film Mal (Home, 2018) in Raqqa shortly after the Syrian Democratic Forces liberated the city from Islamic State. She served as producer of Shero Hinde’s Love in the Face of Genocide (2020) and as executive producer on Antonia Kilian’s The Other Side of the River (2021). She was production assistant on Alba Sotorra’s The Return: Life after ISIS (2021). The Wedding Parade is her first feature film.Evdike promotes the screening of Kurdish films around the rest of the world, and she lectures on filmmaking, screenwriting, and production.  In 2020 she gave the “Freedom Lecture” on the Rojava Film Commune at the Rotterdam Film Festival. In 2022, she was an official artist with Rojava Film Commune at Documenta 15 in Kassel, Germany.

 

 

Rojava Film Commune Afield Fellow 2020

Members of Rojava Film Communce commune together, photo by Eli Amed

People watching at screening project Cinema is in your Neighborhood, 2017, courtesy Diyar Hesso.